My Children No Longer Speak to Me — Do I Have the Right to Deprive Them of Their Inheritance?

It is one of the most painful situations a parent can face — and one that is far more common than many people realize. Your children have stopped talking to you. Months have passed, perhaps years, without a phone call, without a visit, without so much as a text message acknowledging that you exist.

You raised them, sacrificed for them, loved them in ways that were not always perfect but were always real. And now, silence. The estrangement may have happened gradually, one missed holiday at a time, until you realized one day that the relationship had simply ceased to exist. Or it may have happened abruptly, with a falling-out that left you confused and grieving in a way that is hard to explain to people who have not experienced it themselves.

And now, as you sit with the paperwork of your estate plan in front of you, or simply with the thought forming quietly in the back of your mind, you find yourself asking a question that carries enormous weight: do I have the right to leave them nothing?

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The short answer, in most countries and most legal systems, is yes. You generally do have that right. But the full answer is considerably more nuanced, and the decision — if you choose to make it — carries practical, emotional, and relational dimensions that are worth thinking through carefully before you act. This is not a simple question of legal entitlement. It is a question about what kind of legacy you want to leave, what message you want your final decisions to send, and what consequences — intended and unintended — may follow from the choices you make now.

The Legal Reality: You Are Not Obligated to Leave Them Anything
In the United States, unlike in some European countries that have “forced heirship” laws guaranteeing adult children a minimum share of their parents’ estates regardless of circumstances, the law generally allows parents to distribute their assets however they choose. An adult child — one who is no longer a minor and is not financially dependent on you — has no automatic legal claim to your property or other assets unless you specifically leave those assets to them in a will or a trust. The fact that they are your biological or adopted child does not, in and of itself, create an inheritance right under American law. The decision is yours to make.

This is important to understand clearly, because many parents carry a vague assumption — sometimes even a guilty sense of obligation — that their children are entitled to whatever they leave behind simply by virtue of the relationship. That assumption is not legally accurate in most U.S. jurisdictions. As long as you are mentally competent at the time you create or update your estate documents, and as long as the assets in question belong to you, you have the right to decide who receives them after your death. Your estranged adult children may be upset by that decision. They may even challenge it. But the legal foundation for disinheritance of an adult child, when done correctly and explicitly, is solid in most states.

How Estrangement Typically Happens
It is worth pausing here to acknowledge the emotional reality of this situation, because the question of inheritance cannot be separated from the larger experience of estrangement itself. Research on parent-child estrangement has found that it is far more common than most people suspect — affecting millions of families across all demographics, income levels, and cultural backgrounds. The experience typically does not arrive all at once. It builds over years of accumulated misunderstandings, unresolved conflicts, different values or life choices, second marriages, in-law tensions, or simply the slow divergence of two people who once shared a home and now share nothing but genetics. Some estrangements are initiated by the child; others by the parent. Many involve no clear villain and no single defining moment — just a gradual withdrawal of contact until the absence becomes the normal state of things.

For the parent left behind, the grief is real and often unacknowledged by the broader culture, which tends to assume that parent-child estrangement must reflect some fundamental failure on the parent’s part. That assumption is frequently unfair. Many parents who have been estranged by their adult children describe trying repeatedly to reach out, offering apologies for things they may not fully understand, and being met with continued silence or rejection. The pain of this situation is compounded by the social invisibility of it — this is not a loss that is mourned publicly, that receives condolence cards or casseroles or community support. It is a private grief that parents often carry largely alone.

The Practical Side: How to Disinherit Correctly
If you decide that you do not want to leave your estranged children anything, it is critically important to make that decision explicit and legally clear in your estate documents — not simply to omit them from your will or trust without explanation. This distinction matters more than most people realize. If you fail to mention an estranged child at all in your estate plan, they may have grounds to argue in court that you simply forgot about them, or that your documents do not accurately reflect your intentions. This is called a pretermitted heir claim, and it can give a motivated estranged child a foothold to contest your estate, potentially causing expensive and time-consuming legal proceedings that drain the estate’s assets and delay distributions to the people you actually intended to benefit.

 

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